Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.17.3.2 (xanthine oxidase)
8,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Benznidazole (Bz) (N-benzyl-2-nitro-1-imidazole acetamide) is a drug used against Chagas' disease, a parasitic disease afflicting several millions of Latin Americans. Bz administration to Sprague-Dawley male rats at 100 mg/kg p.o. caused subcellular alterations in the adrenal cortex involving fasciculata and reticularis zones but not in the glomerulosa. There is Bz nitroreductase activity in the adrenal microsomal and mitochondrial fractions but most of it is localized in mitochondria. Activity in the two fractions requires NADPH under anaerobic conditions. Mitochondrial Bz nitroreductase activity was inhibited by oxygen. A minor but statistically significant inhibition was observed in mixtures incubated under carbon monoxide. Microsomal Bz nitroreductase activity was not detected under oxygen atmosphere and was not inhibited under carbon monoxide. No Bz nitroreductase activity mediated by xanthine oxidase or aldehyde oxidase was detected in the cytosolic fraction from rat adrenals. Electron microscopic examination of the adrenal cortex from Bz-treated animals revealed cells with marked lipid accumulation and alterations in nuclei, endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria in the reticularis and fasciculata zones. In vitro results suggest a Bz nitroreductive activation, with minor or null P-450 participation, leading to reactive metabolites able to cause damage in various organelles.
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PMID:Benznidazole-induced ultrastructural alterations in rat adrenal cortex. Mechanistic studies. 151 44

Benznidazole (Bz) is a drug used in the chemotherapy of the acute and intermediate phases of Chagas' disease (American Trypanosomiasis), an endemic parasitic disease afflicting more than 16 million people in Latin America. Serious toxic side effects of Bz have been reported in treated human beings and in experimental animals. Bz toxicity would be linked to its nitroreductive bioactivation to reactive intermediates and to the corresponding amine known to occur in vivo and mediated by different enzymatic systems. In the present study the presence of Bz nitroreductases in rat esophagus and the occurrence of Bz induced esophageal cell injury are described. Already 1 and 3 h after an intragastric Bz administration to Sprague-Dawley male rats (240-260 g body weight) at a dose of 100 mg/kg esophageal levels of the drug were 66.4+/-4.0 and 149.2+/-14.3 nmol per g tissue, respectively. The esophageal mucosa homogenates exhibited Bz nitroreductase activity attributable to the participation of cytochrome P450 reductase and xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR). The ultrastructural observation of esophageal tissue from Bz treated animals 24 h after its administration evidenced: detachment and conglomeration of polyribosomes, reduction in the presence of desmosomes and of the amount of bacteria on its surface. The potential significance of these alterations is not fully clear at present. However, these deleterious effects might be additive or synergistic with those induced by the evolution of the disease.
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PMID:Benznidazole-induced ultrastructural and biochemical alterations in rat esophagus. 1296 22

Chagas' disease (American trypanosomiasis) is an endemic parasitic disease in some areas of Latin America. About 16-18 million persons are infected with the aetiological agent of the disease, Trypanosoma cruzi, and more than 100 million are living at risk of infection. There are different modes of infection: (1) via blood sucking vector insects infected with T. cruzi, accounting for 80-90% of transmission of the disease; (2) via blood transfusion or congenital transmission, accounting for 0.5-8% of transmission; (3) other less common forms of infection, eg, from infected food or drinks or via infected organs used in transplants. The acute phase of the disease can last from weeks to months and typically is asymptomatic or associated with fever and other mild nonspecific manifestations. However, life-threatening myocarditis or meningoencephalitis can occur during the acute phase. The death rate for persons in this phase is about 10%. Approximately 10-50% of the survivors develop chronic Chagas' disease, which is characterized by potentially lethal cardiopathy and megacolon or megaoesophagus. There are two drugs available for the aetiological treatment of Chagas' disease: nifurtimox (Nfx) and benznidazole (Bz). Nfx is a nitrofurane and Bz is a nitroimidazole compound. The use of these drugs to treat the acute phase of the disease is widely accepted. However, their use in the treatment of the chronic phase is controversial. The undesirable side effects of both drugs are a major drawback in their use, frequently forcing the physician to stop treatment. The most frequent adverse effects observed in the use of Nfx are: anorexia, loss of weight, psychic alterations, excitability, sleepiness, digestive manifestations such as nausea or vomiting, and occasionally intestinal colic and diarrhoea. In the case of Bz, skin manifestations are the most notorious (e.g., hypersensitivity, dermatitis with cutaneous eruptions, generalized oedema, fever, lymphoadenopathy, articular and muscular pain), with depression of bone marrow, thrombocytopenic purpura and agranulocytosis being the more severe manifestations. Experimental toxicity studies with Nfx evidenced neurotoxicity, testicular damage, ovarian toxicity, and deleterious effects in adrenal, colon, oesophageal and mammary tissue. In the case of Bz, deleterious effects were observed in adrenals, colon and oesophagus. Bz also inhibits the metabolism of several xenobiotics biotransformed by the cytochrome P450 system and its reactive metabolites react with fetal components in vivo. Both drugs exhibited significant mutagenic effects and were shown to be tumorigenic or carcinogenic in some studies. The toxic side effects of both nitroheterocyclic derivatives require enzymatic reduction of their nitro group. Those processes are fundamentally mediated by cytochrome P450 reductase and cytochrome P450. Other enzymes such as xanthine oxidoreductase or aldehyde oxidase may also be involved.
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PMID:Toxic side effects of drugs used to treat Chagas' disease (American trypanosomiasis). 1693 19